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Networks and trans-cultural exchange: Slave trading in the South Atlantic, 1590-1867

Richardson, David

Authors

David Richardson



Contributors

David Richardson
Editor

Filipa Ribeiro da Silva
Editor

Abstract

Studies of the South Atlantic commercial world typically focus on connections between Angola and Brazil, and specifically on the flows of enslaved Africans from Luanda and the relations between Portuguese-Brazilian traders and other agents and their local African and mulatto trading partners. While reaffirming the centrality of slaving activities and of the networks that underpinned them, this collection of new essays shows that there were major Portuguese-Brazilian slave-trading activities in the South Atlantic outside Luanda as well as the Angolan-Brazil axes upon which historians usually focus. In drawing attention to these aspects of the South Atlantic commercial world, we are reminded that this was a world of change and also one in which Portuguese-Brazilian traders were unable to sustain in the face of competition from northern European rivals the dominant position in slave trading in Atlantic Africa that they had first established in the sixteenth century.

Citation

Richardson, D. (2014). D. Richardson, & F. Ribeiro da Silva (Eds.). Networks and trans-cultural exchange: Slave trading in the South Atlantic, 1590-1867. Brill Academic Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004280588

Book Type Edited Book
Publication Date Nov 28, 2014
Deposit Date Jun 11, 2019
Publisher Brill Academic Publishers
Pages 294
Series Title Atlantic world
Series Number 30
ISBN 978-9004280571
DOI https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004280588
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/1970214
Publisher URL https://brill.com/view/title/26696